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NITROUS
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Nitrous is a slang term for nitrous oxide (N2O) also sometimes referred to as
NOS. Nitrous oxide is an oxidizing agent used to increase an engine's power
output by allowing for faster burning of a fuel (usually gasoline). Nitrous can
be used with alcohol in the mud racing categories.
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Overview |
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Types
of nitrous systems |
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"Dry"
nitrous system |
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"Wet
single-point" nitrous system |
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"Wet
direct port" nitrous system
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Plenum
bar
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| Overview |
| When
nitrous oxide decomposes, a single molecule will release 1/2 mole of oxygen
gas, allowing an oxygen saturation of 33% to be reached. Air, which contains
only 21% oxygen, permits a maximum saturation of only 21%. This oxygen combines
with hydrocarbons such as gasoline, alcohol, and diesel fuel to produce carbon
dioxide and water vapor, which expand and exert pressure on pistons. The
greater the oxygen saturation, the higher the pressure and the greater the
power released. However, peak cylinder pressure alone does not determine engine
performance. |
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| Nitrous
oxide is stored as a liquid in tanks, but because of its low boiling point it
will vaporize when it enters a cylinder during the intake stroke. As it boils,
the cylinder temperature will drop, reducing the pressure during the
compression stroke and thus reducing power loss. This drop in intake manifold
temperature also increases the density of the air/fuel charge, thereby
increasing the cylinder's volumetric efficiency. |
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N2O breaks down to release oxygen, nitrogen (N2) is also formed. Nitrogen gas
contains molecules with extremely stable triple bonds, and so the formation of
nitrogen is very exothermic. Because N2 is generated during the engine's power
stroke, nitrous boosts power by increasing the temperature inside the cylinder
by the formation of diatomic nitrogen. |
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original company in nitrous oxide injection was NOS. Today, there are several
competing companies in the field, including NOS and Edelbrock. |
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Nitrous systems can increase power by 45% or more, depending on configuration,
and are usually built in one or two stages. All Pro Mod cars and some Pro
Street cars use three stages, for additional power.
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Fans can easily identify nitrous-equipped cars at the track by the fact that
most will "purge" the delivery system prior to reaching the starting line. A
separate electrically operated valve is used to release air and gaseous nitrous
oxide trapped in the delivery system. This brings liquid nitrous oxide all the
way up through the plumbing from the storage tank to the solenoid valve or
valves that will release it into the engine's intake tract. When the purge
system is activated, one or more plumes of nitrous oxide will be visible for a
moment as the liquid flashes to vapor as it is released. The purpose of a
nitrous purge is to ensure that the correct amount of nitrous oxide is
delivered the moment the system is activated-air or gaseous nitrous oxide in
the line will cause the car to "bog" for an instant until liquid nitrous oxide
reaches the intake.
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| Types
of nitrous systems |
There are three types of nitrous systems: "dry", "wet single-point", and "wet
multi-point". A nitrous system is primarily concerned with introducing fuel and
nitrous into the engine's cylinders, and combining them for most efficient
combustion. A fourth type called a plenum bar system sprays the nitrous into
the plenums of the intake manifold.
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| "Dry"
nitrous system |
In a "dry" nitrous system, extra fuel required is introduced through the fuel
injectors, keeping the upper intake dry of fuel. This property is what gives
the "dry" system its name. Fuel flow can be increased either by increasing the
pressure in the fuel injection system, or by modifying the vehicles' computer
to increase the time the fuel injectors remain open during the engine cycle.
This is typically done by spraying nitrous past the MAF sensor (Mass Air Flow),
which then sends a signal to the vehicle's computer telling it that it sees
colder denser air, and that more fuel is needed. This is typically not an exact
method of adding fuel. Once additional fuel has been introduced, it can burn
with the extra oxygen provided by the nitrous, providing additional power.
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Dry nitrous systems rely on a single type nozzle that only sprays nitrous
through it, not nitrous and fuel. These nitrous nozzles generally spray in a 90
degree pattern.
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| "Wet
single-point" nitrous system |
A "wet single-point" nitrous system introduces the fuel and nitrous together,
causing the upper intake to become wet with fuel. In carbureted applications,
this is typically accomplished with a spraybar plate mounted between the
carburetor base and the intake manifold, while cars fitted with electronic fuel
injection often use a plate mounted between the manifold and the base of the
throttle body, or a single nozzle mounted in the intake tract. However, the
intake must be designed for wet flow (for example, carburetors also require a
wet flow intake), as distribution problems or intake backfires may result.
Dry-flow intakes are designed to contain only air, which will travel through
smaller pipes and tighter turns with less pressure, whereas wet-flow intakes
are designed to contain a mixture of fuel and air. "Wet" nitrous systems tend
to produce more power than "dry" systems, but are correspondingly more
expensive and difficult to install.
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A wet nozzle differs in the way that it takes in both nitrous and fuel which
are metered by jets to create a perfect or proper A/F (air fuel ratio).
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Newer wet nitrous kits on domestic cars have become increasingly easy to
install by pulling fuel via the schraeder valve on the fuel rail which is
normally designated as a fuel test port. It makes plumbing and using a wet
nitrous kit much more simple.
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"Wet direct port" nitrous system
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A "wet direct port" nitrous system introduces nitrous and fuel directly into
each intake port on the engine. These systems are also known as direct port
nitrous systems. Normally, these systems combine nitrous and fuel through
several nozzles similar in design to a "wet single-point" nozzle, which mixes
and meters the nitrous and fuel delivered to each cylinder individually,
allowing each cylinder's nitrous/fuel ratio to be adjusted without affecting
the other cylinders. Note that there are still several ways to introduce
nitrous through a direct port system. There are several different types of
nozzles and placements ranging from fogger nozzles that require you to drill
and tap your manifold, to specialty direct port efi nozzles that fit into your
fuel injector ports along with your fuel injectors.
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A multi-point system is the most powerful and efficient type of nitrous system,
due to the placement of the nozzle in each runner, as well as the ability to
use more and higher capacity solenoid valves. Wet multi-point kits can go as
high as 1,100 horsepower (820 kW) with only one stage, but most produce that
much power with two or three systems. These systems are also the most complex
and expensive systems, requiring significant modification to the engine,
including adding a distribution block and solenoid assembly, as well as
drilling, tapping, and building plumbing for each cylinder intake. These
systems are most often used on racing vehicles specially built to take the
strain of such high power levels. Many high-horsepower race applications will
use more than one nozzle per cylinder, plumbed in "stages" to allow greater
control of how much power is delivered with each stage. A two-stage system will
actually allow three different levels of additional horsepower; for example, a
small first stage can be used in first gear to prevent excessive wheel spin,
and then turned off in favor of a larger second stage once the car is moving.
In top gear, both stages can be activated at the same time for maximum
horsepower.
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Plenum bar
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Another type of system is called a plenum bar system. These are spraybars that
are installed inside of the plenums of the intake manifold. Plenum bar systems
are usually used in conjunction with direct port systems in multi-stage nitrous
systems.
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